Grammodora angolana, Takano, 2024
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2024.72.10 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1E9373DC-683C-4BE1-AEAF-F8711A96FC4F |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/806C0E36-8C12-4CCA-B5DD-75CEDD27BA39 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:806C0E36-8C12-4CCA-B5DD-75CEDD27BA39 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Grammodora angolana |
status |
sp. nov. |
Grammodora angolana View in CoL sp. n.
https://zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:806C0E36-8C12-4CCA-B5DD-75CEDD27BA39
( Figs 6–8 View Figures 1–13 , 15, 18 View Figures 14–19 , 21 View Figure 21 )
Holotype ♂ ( NHMUK):
“ ANGOLA (A5) / Sa da Bandeira / 22–24.ii.1972 // Southern / African Exp. / B.M. 1972-1 // NHMUK 014200400 [QR Code]”
Paratypes (2♂♂):
ANGOLA: Tundavala , 27–29.iii.1972, Southern African Expedition (2♂♂ NHMUK) .
Description and diagnosis.
Forewing length: holotype male: 20 mm; paratypes: 19–21 mm.
Phenotypically indistinguishable from G. nigrolineata although the new species is generally a smaller insect and the forewing is slightly less elongate. In the male genitalia of G. angolana , the socii are almost half as long and hence more equilateral-triangular in shape, the valves are narrower and noticeably shorter, the posterolateral processes of the vinculum are narrower, and the phallus is distinctly serrate apicoventrally. As these two species are distributed allopatrically, there is unlikely to be any confusion in specimens with good provenance.
Female unknown.
DNA divergences. Unavailable.
Derivatio nominis. A patronymic in reference to the type locality.
Vernacular name. Angolan Black Lined Eggar.
Distribution. The new species is known only from the Lubango area ( Fig. 21 View Figure 21 ) and is likely restricted to the south-western escarpment in Angola, a striking landscape of sheer cliffs with deep ravines and gorges at the southernmost extent of the Angolan montane forest-grassland mosaic ecoregion known to harbour numerous endemic flora and fauna (summarised in Baptista & Mills 2018). Although Angola has in recent times been poorly sampled, this species was never encountered by Pogge and Falkenstein (MfN), Ansorge (ANHRT, NHMUK), Barns, Jordan, Monteiro or Pemberton (NHMUK) nor has it been recorded in the literature from Angola (e.g., Tams 1936) or northern Namibia (e.g., Kopij 2014; Kopij & Paxton 2019). Moreover, despite over 700 observations of moths from Angola on iNaturalist (accessed March 2024), there are no records of this conspicuous insect suggesting that the distribution is not continuous across central and eastern Angola. The nearest known records of G. nigrolineata are over 1000 km away in the vicinity of the Congo-Zambezi watershed and is seemingly absent along the sandy Zambezi floodplain in western Zambia (despite repeated sampling by ANHRT) as well as the Angolan Dry Miombo Woodlands on deep Kalahari sands in eastern Angola ( Huntley 2023). Similar to other fauna restricted to the Precambrian rocks of western Angola ( Bates et al. 2023), the aridification of the Kalahari in the mid- to late-Miocene may provide one explanation for the isolation of G. angolana .
NHMUK |
Natural History Museum, London |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.